
Don Levy
Directing
Biography
Don Levy (May 8, 1932 – January 9, 1987) was an Australian artist and filmmaker.
Known For

Research scientists experimenting with time warps are accidentally propelled forward into an unbearable future.
The Time Travelers

When a young poet hires a marketing company to turn his suicide into a mass-media spectacle, he finds that his subversive intentions are quickly diluted into a reactionary gesture.
Herostratus

Impressions of contemporary British arts and fashion. Summary of art through the ages taking in every thing from Mary Quant to the Marat/Sade production. Made for the Montreal "Expo '67" exhibition.
Opus

Images are rapidly cut to match the delivery of Margaret Robertson's voice-over.
Point of Noon

No description available.
Malaise

The first film made by Don Levy is a comedic satire of pretensions and perversions of British academia. Made for the Cambridge Film Society, it is shot in grainy black-and-white scuffed up to resemble aged prints of 1920s Surrealist films and displays an astringent sense of the ironies that can be achieved through juxtapositions of image, voice-over text, and music.
Ten Thousand Talents

No description available.
Punulse

Produced by the Nuffiled Foundation of Unit for the History of ideas, Time Is, directed by Don Levy (Herostratus), is an experimental collage film looking at the scientific problems connected with the nature of time. Alternating between original and `found' footage such as newsreels, sports footage, nature photography, the film uses a number of techniques including slow motion, time-lapse and single-frame filming, negative imagery and juxtaposition.
Time Is

No description available.
Catharsis

No description available.